Sublebrity

//sʌbˈlɛ.bɹɪ.ti//

Synonyms for "sublebrity" (4 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Closest matches (1)

Noun(1 words)

Strong matches (1)

Noun(1 words)

Related words (2)

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

3 relation types

coordinate

5 entries

derived from

2 entries

has context

1 entries

Sample sentences

4 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

After the screening, a large crowd filled the street outside the theater, playing spot-the-sublebrity with some of the film's prime characters, including Nirvana photographer Alice Wheeler and [Courtney] Love's estranged (and notoriously unhinged) father, Hank Harrison, who appears in the movie hawking his self-published anti-Courtney screed, Who Killed Kurt Cobain?

Source: wiktionary

Of course, the ultimate celebrity of all time is still Marilyn Monroe. In the nearly fifty years since her death, hundreds of books have been written about her and her classic beauty still looks modern. I wonder how many of today's sub-lebrities will ever achieve that degree of long-term adulation?

Source: wiktionary

It's been fourteen years of some serious chasing after stardom and just as seriously running away from it, but I haven't become a star. I might be on my way, though. As I write this book, I have secured myself a place as a sublebrity in the pantheon of America's queer and postmodern subcultures. That makes me happy.

Source: wiktionary

But I could definitely consider a Shower List – a list of the biggest shower of horrors in any field at any given moment. First up, then: Britain's Ghastliest Financial Sublebrities. The idea is tangentially suggested – but of course – by the FT [Financial Times]'s exposé of the Presidents Club, a men-only charity party at which City chaps apparently seem to trade donations to the sick children of Great Ormond Street Hospital for the chance to sexually harass the female help.

Source: wiktionary

More for "sublebrity"

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.